Mel Kendrick “sub-stratum”

David Nolan Gallery

poster for Mel Kendrick “sub-stratum”

This event has ended.

David Nolan Gallery announces Mel Kendrick: sub-stratum, the artist’s sixth exhibition at the gallery since 2003. The exhibition includes a group of new freestanding cast concrete sculptures, as well as cast paper drawings and a mahogany wall sculpture.

A preeminent American sculptor – considered among the leading practitioners in the medium – Kendrick’s thoroughgoing practice has involved the use of cast bronze, concrete, a variety of woods, as well as investigations with cast paper. Kendrick addresses fundamental questions around sculpture: namely, the relationship between the object as we experience it and the clearly evident means by which it was created. An abiding theme over the years has been the role of a sculpture’s base as not only a practical support or display feature but also as a crucial generative component within the work itself. Kendrick’s process typically starts with a simple cubic volume (resembling a plinth) from which cylindrical or conical forms are unearthed and then set atop or underneath this original element. Guided by the essential properties of his chosen material, the naturally occurring character of wood or concrete can define the direction of the artwork.

Kendrick first began working with cast concrete in 2009, producing “Markers”, a series of five large-scale black and white sculptures that were displayed in New York’s Madison Square Park. With these works, the artist hit upon a breakthrough process wherein a polystyrene model could be used as a mold to generate each component of the sculpture. Paralleling his earlier undertakings in wood, Kendrick discovered he could apply the same conceptual logic using a handheld hotwire. Cutting freely into a foam model, the resulting elements would be used as molds into which concrete could be poured.

In the present exhibition, a work in the main gallery, entitled Pinch Dog (also the name for an obscure wood working device), sets itself apart in its slate-grey coloring (an effect which is achieved by mixing carbon black pigment into the concrete). In making this work, Kendrick projected a series of cylinders through all six sides of the cube, resulting in a network of interconnected columns visible through various openings. Above sit the multidimensional internal forms: a combination of the columnar structures (excavated from below) and fragments of the cubic volume’s exterior.

The other works in the main gallery are immediately distinct from Pinch Dog in their use of natural white concrete with polished surfaces. Whereas Pinch Dog could be said to have the deep grey appearance of geological rock, these other works, by contrast, achieve an effect resembling marble. Three of these white sculptures present one further inversion, whereby the cubic volume (typically serving as the base) is placed on top, rather than below, its internal forms. Using the collective title “Blockheads”, Kendrick suggests an anthropomorphic element typically absent from his large-scale work.

In the rear gallery, a single work, entitled RD 1, occupies the room. In a twist on the determinedly “black” or alternatively “white” constitution of the works in the main gallery, this sculpture willfully combines both treatments to create a two-toned work which is the result of successive layers of poured concrete. Kendrick describes this black and white visual effect as a “coding process”, one that allows the work to “call attention to itself”. Taking inspiration from the use of black and white marble in Siena Cathedral, the artist has remarked on how the scheme acts like camouflage, passing through specific details. In this work, Kendrick dispenses with his dialectic on the cube in dialogue with its internal components, creating an autonomous form that reveals its interior and exterior in a single statement.

Media

Schedule

from October 22, 2015 to December 05, 2015

Opening Reception on 2015-10-22 from 18:00 to 20:00

Artist(s)

Mel Kendrick

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